62 .pæ <. :::::::r::::.. :::::::::-.:::::.- -:::II::. :::::::::IJ::::: --:::I:::.. -::::::I:::::... -:::r.:::::.... TROPICAL WORSTED WEAVE' SUITS .',',,' ".' DACRON* I COTTON BASKET WEAVES $52.50 . ".:-;' ; ;'. /" .:\;", , ...:. '.,.::.:;<.:-/. J. PRESS 'Worsted Weave' Tropical Suits are the re- suIt of a careful screening of modem textile blends. -'! "Æ "'J!' '. ! : /-i :,.r ' '::f:. ; : ; ; ,J-"; ' ;i , '" 0' Simulating the appearance of wool worsteds, they are economical in cost, mini- mal in weight. absorb hard wear gracefully, and can be dry cleaned or washed. '\ DACRON* IORLONt GLEN CHECK $59.50 .ãi:s _ I . t Tailored in the J. PRESS model with swelled edges and seams and hook vent. " .. '-II!: '.... -.' i' DACRON* IORLONt HAIRLINE $59.50 * DliPont s Polye ter Fibre ÎDllPont s Acrylic Fibre '. tII; ."'- -. Sample Swatches & Brochure Sent On Request, Mail Orders Filled. Regular Exhibits In 33 Principal Cities. Enquiries Invited. """:::I.r:::.. ::::::::.:::.. -:::::::::.z:::.. --:::I.:::.. ::::::::J:::.... '- 1 (1" " ... '\, , Þ- ,.-:.. . if you ..' aren't touring 1'4'y Thailand .. Ii( " this season " ' !!. '. iI"" rooster > has woven \:. its silken spell ' .:............ '. for you. , " ef"O . . 11 '" . rooster ............ -i. .. . ....;... "'-. ...... ' -;:". i Original Thai Silk handwoven in Bangkok exclusively for Rooster, $3,50. BLOOMINGDALE'S, New York' FILENE'S, Boston' JOHN WANAMAKER, Philadelphia' L S. AYRES OF INDIANA, Indianapolis BURDINE'S, Miami and other fine stores, ROOSTER CRAFT, INC., 17 EAST 37 STREET, NEW YORK i' trousers and a doctor's high-necked tunic, which was blood-splashed and partly unbuttoned at the end of each busy day. As for the police, one group of them was permanent. This was the askaris, the chids' police, who lived in orderly lines of huts behind the chiefs' compounds. These men wore caps and cheap khaki uniforms but no shoes, and sometimes canied rifles; however, being Dodoth, they were never trusted with bullets, so in times of need they used the rifle stocks as clubs. The second group was the Protectorate Police, who were almost permanent, since their tours of duty in Kaabong could last for years. They were Afri- cans from "advanced" parts of Ugan- da, Kenya, Tanganyika, and the Sudan, and they lived, with their fami- lies, at the police post on one of the Kaabong hills, occupying prefabricated round tin houses that sparkled in the sun. These men and their families, with the dispenser and his family and the teachers at the mission school and their families, formed an enclave in Kaabong, that hardship post to which their jobs had taken them. 'Vith their 'Yestern clothes and educations, they seemed more like each other than those among them who were Nilo-Hamites-the racial strain to which the Dodoth be- long-seemed like the Dodoth. The 'Vesternized Nilo- Hamites' wives, lonely in the isolation of Kaabong, spent a great deal of time in their houses, where the curtains shut out the view of the raw hills, or else they visited each other or stood together at the town pump, installed by the gov- ernment near the river, to talk while they or their daughters or their servants filled the kerosene tins in which every- one in that country carried water. Only when they had talked for a long time would the women help each other lift the heavy tins to their headrests, and return home to their laundry or their dishes. Any Dodoth women at the pump would fill their tins or gourds and be on their way quickly. Day by day, in Kaabong, the local governipg of the Dodoth wound on. The Protectorate Police, who some- times had the use of a Land-Rover, might clatter with it into town and unload from its trucklike back the bleeding, naked vJCtJm of a raid, speared through a leg or a shoulder, whom they would heave onto the dis- pensary cot and interview while the dispenser sutured. '''hen the interview, all written down on paper, was at an end, a policeman would seize the vic- tim's hand, ink his thumb, and press his thumbprint on the paper. Rdevant E -::::i :::::::!